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This couple quit their jobs to travel the world after 6 years of saving up

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Leaving the rat race behind to travel the world remains a pipe dream for many. But for Chia Kim Hui, 35, and Adrian Chew, 34, it’s their reality.

The couple, who quit their corporate jobs to become full-time globetrotters, kicked off their journey last November in Germany and hope to remain overseas for “as long as possible”, they tell AsiaOne.

After over 10 years working nine-to-five jobs — Adrian was in the IT field, while Kim Hui was a HR manager — both of them felt trapped and burned out.

“Every day it’s the same thing. We get up every morning and head to work. When we reach home, we’re already very tired. We can’t do anything that we like,” Kim Hui says of their old life.

Even though they would try to explore new places in Singapore on the weekends, it simply wasn’t enough to satisfy their wanderlust.

And so, after years of planning, they embarked on a new life — living out of their suitcases and planning their travel itinerary one destination at a time.

(Read also “9 Stylish And Practical Carry-On Bags For Your Next Trip“)

From office romance to a lifelong adventure

About ten years ago, the pair met as colleagues in a logistics company. After Adrian helped Kim Hui to set up her laptop and then romance blossomed.

They were both avid travellers and would travel around three times overseas in a year, with the goal of seeing new places each time.

Kim Hui fondly recalls their last trip before the pandemic — a summer trip to Norway where they got to see the midnight sun.

With a long bucket list that included items like seeing the Northern Lights, feeding reindeer and visiting a whale safari, they’d long entertained the notion of travelling full-time.

Since their marriage in 2015, they’d started saving and planning in earnest. The pandemic shattered their plans and left them in limbo.

In that time, Kim Hui left her job and set up PangKim Adventure, the couple’s travel blog which is named after a combination of their Chinese names.

When the news of Singapore’s first Vaccinated Travel Lanes with Germany and Brunei broke last August, they knew it was now or never. Adrian quit his job and they set their plans in motion.

They’d already spent their twenties working, and didn’t want to have to wait till retirement to see the world.

“The thing is, when we grow old, we’re only left with that much energy to travel, and we can’t go far,” Adrian explains.

“By the time we are in our forties, I think after our trip, it will be very, very difficult for us to find a job again.”

Not rich, but thrifty

Adrian and Kim Hui made their way slowly through Germany, Denmark, and Norway since November.

While some of their followers have been living vicariously through their social media updates and leaving positive comments, they’ve also attracted some naysayers who labelled them rich and unrelatable.

However, the pair say they’re anything but.

“We are really not rich. We are just like regular typical Singaporeans,” Adrian says. “But we are more disciplined in the sense that we don’t splurge in Singapore on luxury items.”

(Here are “5 Habits Of Super Frugal People To Save More Money“)

“The most expensive restaurants we’ll go to are Saizeriya, Astons or Sushi Express.”

For six years, they’ve been funnelling a quarter of their income to their travel fund each month and have accumulated a “substantial” amount that’s enough to last a year of travel, Kim Hui reveals.

For now, their plan is to draw on their savings for their travels, but they’re hoping that their blog and social media following will eventually grow enough to become a viable source of income.

If not, it’s back to the corporate world for them — if they can find jobs, that is.

When we ask if they had any misgivings about giving up their stable life back in Singapore, the pair responds with some words of wisdom.

“It’s not easy to live life out of a suitcase. It’s not easy to go to foreign countries with no friends and families. However, life is not easy for us.

“Travelling full time is definitely not a bed of roses. But you get to experience wonders that you can never see in Singapore.”

This article was published for the first time in AsiaOne.






Source: Her World

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